[The re-integration of the East European economies into a
globalised capitalist one]

By Peter Waterman, Labor-L@yorklu.ca, 14 December 2000

The Arthur Perlo story placed on L-List by Charles Brown presents a
classical case of the re-integration of the East European economies
into a globalised capitalist one, at the expense of the steelworkers
at both ends. His conclusion, on the necessity for labour
internationalism flows out of his analysis. I have only one quibble:
his characterisation of this industry, and the Czechoslovakian economy
as ‘socialist’.

If my recollection is correct, the Kosice steel plant, in Eastern
Slovakia, was a white elephant project, placed where there was neither
raw material nor fuel, as a political gesture in the direction of
Slovak nationalism. If its technology was as good as the current
Western one, I would be inclined to check where it came from. As for
its production, I would hazard a guess that much of it went into arms
production—to defend the regime from the West—or was sold
to dubiously democratic or progressive regimes in the then Third
World. What went into consumer goods would have produced inferior
goods that Czechoslovaks scorned.

The regime was not ‘overthrown’ by a Western invasion, but
collapsed as a result of its own petrification and following a short
wave of democratic protest. It would be interesting to know whether or
not Kosice steelworkers took part in this movement. When rightwing
nationalist politicians in Slovakia broke up the joint republic,
founded after WWI, this was neither enthusiastically welcomed nor
resisted by the people of Slovakia. Nor, according to Perlo's
account were they willing/able to resist the stealing of their
steelworks by corrupt managers or officials.

Now, what, in the name of Marx, has any of this to do with socialism?
Unless by ‘socialism’ you mean ‘state
collectivism’: a state-controlled economy, a centralist and
authoritarian bureaucracy, a self-subordination to the imperial power
that invaded it in 1968, a demobilised and demoralised working class,
an ‘internationalism’ that was reduced to slogans and the
supply of tanks to authoritarian regimes in the Third World.

The nature of this socialism is best revealed by a Czechoslovak jokes
from the 1960s: ‘What is the definition of socialism?’
‘It is the stage of development between capitalism
and…capitalism’. Or another ‘Socialism is probably
alright, but they should have tried it out on animals first’,
‘They pretend to pay us and we pretend to work’. I could
continue.

The international working-class solidarity that Perlo concludes with
is going to have to start from point zero. I don’t know if Perlo
has any ideas about how to do this. I would suggest first asking the
US and Slovak steelworkers involved to tell us what they think and
feel about it. Then the union locals concerned. Then the International
Metalworkers Federation.